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By Suzanne Donahue
| Wednesday, August 31, 2016
When Ranya Idliby’s daughter was in grade school, she asked
whether, as Muslims, they celebrated Christmas or Hanukkah. The question made
Ranya think about her own faith and wonder why she knew so little about other
religions. She recruited two other suburban moms—Suzanne Oliver, a devout
Christian who had been raised Catholic but had converted to the Episcopal
Church, and Priscilla Warner, who defined her Jewishness more as a cultural
imperative than a religious one—to write a children’s book with her about the
similarities, differences, and connections between Christianity, Islam, and
Judaism. READ
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